Department of Human Structure and Repair, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium.
Sorbonne Université, GRC 001, GREEN Groupe de recherche en Neuro-Urologie, AP-HP, Hôpital Rothschild, Paris, France.
Int J Clin Pract. 2020 Sep;74(9):e13539. doi: 10.1111/ijcp.13539. Epub 2020 Jun 9.
The impact of food and drinks on body fluid metabolism is of direct clinical relevance but current evidence remains fragmented.
Synthesise current evidence on the role of food and drinks in urine production.
Systematic review as per PRISMA guidelines using MEDLINE and EMBASE databases (completed October 2019). Studies reporting on the effect of food, food constituents, and drinks on urine production were included. Two authors performed an independent extraction of relevant articles using predetermined data sets and completed quality-of-study indicators.
A total of 49 studies were included, of which 21 enroled human subjects, and 28 were clinically relevant animal studies (all of which utilised rodent models). The included studies were determined to be of variable quality. High dietary sodium, as well as wine, spirits, high-caffeine coffee, and caffeinated energy drinks, increased urine production in human studies. Decreased urine production was associated with low dietary sodium and consumption of milk, orange juice, and high-salt/high-sugar drinks. In animal models, a variety of fruits, vegetables, herbs, spices, and honey were associated with increased urine production.
Current evidence suggests that although several types of food and drinks may impact body fluid metabolism, the quality of the data is variable. Urine production appears to be influenced by multiple factors including composition (ie, moisture, macronutrients, and electrolytes), metabolite load, and the presence of specific diuresis-promoting substances (eg, caffeine, alcohol) and other bioactive phytochemicals. Future research is needed to support current evidence and the physiologic mechanisms underlying these findings.
食物和饮料对体液代谢的影响具有直接的临床相关性,但现有证据仍然较为零散。
综合目前关于食物和饮料在尿液生成中的作用的证据。
根据 PRISMA 指南,使用 MEDLINE 和 EMBASE 数据库进行系统评价(于 2019 年 10 月完成)。纳入报告食物、食物成分和饮料对尿液生成影响的研究。两位作者使用预定的数据集合独立提取相关文章,并完成研究质量指标。
共纳入 49 项研究,其中 21 项纳入了人体研究,28 项为具有临床相关性的动物研究(均使用啮齿动物模型)。纳入的研究质量参差不齐。高膳食钠以及葡萄酒、烈性酒、高咖啡因咖啡和含咖啡因的能量饮料会增加人体的尿液生成。低膳食钠和摄入牛奶、橙汁和高盐/高糖饮料与尿液生成减少有关。在动物模型中,各种水果、蔬菜、草药、香料和蜂蜜与尿液生成增加有关。
目前的证据表明,尽管多种类型的食物和饮料可能会影响体液代谢,但数据的质量是可变的。尿液生成似乎受到多种因素的影响,包括组成(即水分、宏量营养素和电解质)、代谢物负荷以及特定的利尿促进物质(如咖啡因、酒精)和其他生物活性植物化学物质的存在。需要进一步的研究来支持目前的证据以及这些发现背后的生理机制。